| Literature DB >> 28298219 |
Caterina Fazzi1,2, David H Saunders3, Kathryn Linton4,5, Jane E Norman1, Rebecca M Reynolds6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the general population, at least 50% of time awake is spent in sedentary behaviours. Sedentary behaviours are activities that expend less energy than 1.5 metabolic equivalents, such as sitting. The amount of time spent in sedentary behaviours is a risk factor for diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and death from all causes. Even individuals meeting physical activity guidelines are at a higher risk of premature death and adverse metabolic outcomes if they sit for extended intervals. The associations between sedentary behaviour with type 2 diabetes and with impaired glucose tolerance are stronger for women than for men. It is not known whether sedentary behaviour in pregnancy influences pregnancy outcomes, but if those negative outcomes observed in general adult population also occur in pregnancy, this could have implications for adverse outcomes for mothers and offspring. We aimed to determine the proportion of time spent in sedentary behaviours among pregnant women, and the association of sedentary behaviour with pregnancy outcomes in mothers and offspring.Entities:
Keywords: Pregnancy; Sedentarism; Sedentary behaviours
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28298219 PMCID: PMC5353895 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-017-0485-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Fig. 1Search strategy flow diagram
Description of included studies (arranged alphabetically)
| Author | Country | Number of participants | Study design | Criteria for inclusion | Assessment method | Definition of sedentary | Quality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Both, et al. (2010) [ | UK | 11759 | Cohort | Pregnant women due to deliver between April 1st 1991 and December 31st 1992. | Self-reported questionnaire. | Non-objective. | Who declared being mostly sitting. | Intermediate |
| Chasan-Taber, et al. (2014) [ | USA | 1276 | Cohort | Women of Puerto Rican or Dominican Republic heritage. | Modified version of the Pregnancy Physical Activity Questionnaire (PPAQ). | Non-objective. | Activities expending <1.5 METs. | Intermediate |
| Chasan-Taber, et al. (2015) [ | USA | 1240 | Cohort | Women of Puerto Rico or Dominican Republic heritage. | PPAQ. | Non-objective. | The sum of the MET-h/day spent watching TV/videos or sitting/standing at home, work, or during transportation. | Intermediate |
| Di Fabio, et al. (2015) [ | USA | 46 | Cohort | Healthy pregnant women, including women between 18 and 45 years of age and singleton pregnancy. | - 7 day record diary. | - Non-objective. | Activities expending ≤1.5 METs (independent of nighttime sleep). | Intermediate |
| - SenseWear® Mini armband accelerometer. | - Objective. | |||||||
| - ActivPAL™ Multi-sensor accelerometer. | - Non-objective. | |||||||
| Evenson, et al. (2010) [ | USA | 1280 | Cohort | Pregnant women ≥16 years of age. | The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). | Non-objective. | Two questions on TV watching and computer usage outside of work hours were used as SB indicators. Women were also asked if they were ‘mostly sitting’ during their usual daily activities. | Poor |
| Evenson, et al. (2011) [ | USA | 359 | Cross-sectional | Pregnant women ≥16 years. | ActiGraph accelerometer. | Objective. | Activities expending <100 counts per minute. | Intermediate |
| Gollenberg, et al. (2010) [ | USA | 1006 | Cohort | Latina ethnicity, age 16–40 years old, singleton pregnancy, and no prior participation in the study. | Modified version of the Kaiser Physical Activity Survey (KPAS). | Non-objective. | Hours spent TV watching per day and frequency of sitting at work. | Intermediate |
| Gradmark, et al. (2011) [ | Sweden | 101 | Cross-sectional | Normal weight and overweight women without diabetes were studied. | Actiheart monitor. | Objective. | Epochs with valid heart rate data and zero accelerometry counts/min. | Intermediate |
| Hawkins, et al. (2014 Im.) [ | USA | 260 | Randomized controlled trial | Women in their first trimester of pregnancy, between 16 and 40 years old, and at high risk for GDM. | Pregnancy Physical Activity Questionnaire (PPAQ). | Non-objective. | The amount of time spent watching TV or videos, or sitting or standing at home, work, or during transportation. | Good |
| Hawkins, et al. (2014 PA) [ | USA | 294 | Cross-sectional | Women in the 2003–2006 NHANES study cycles who self-reported currently being pregnant, were 16 year or older, and who had available data on C reactive protein, physical activity, and SB. | ActiGraph accelerometer. | Objective. | Activities expending <100 counts per minute. | Intermediate |
| Hayes, et al. (2014) [ | UK | 183 | Randomized controlled trial | All obese (BMI ≥ 30 K/m2) pregnant women. | - Acti-Graph accelerometer. | - Objective. | - Accelerometry: any minute with ≤100 counts/min. | Good |
| - Recent Physical Activity Questionnaire (RPAQ). | - Non-objective. | - RPAQ, minutes spent on activities <1.5 MET. | ||||||
| Hegaard, et al. (2010) [ | Denmark | 4558 | Cohort | Danish-speaking pregnant women. | Self-reported questionnaires. | Non-objective. | Those who chose “mostly sitting” to describe most correctly her level of leisuretime activity. | Intermediate |
| Hegaard, et al. (2011) [ | Denmark | 4718 | Cohort | Age ≥ 18 years, Danish speaking, singleton pregnancy, and intended spontaneous vaginal delivery. | Self-administered questionnaire. | Non-objective. | Those who answered: “Reading, watching television, or pursuing some other sedentary occupation”, as the most appropriate description of her activities. | Intermediate |
| Hjorth, et al. (2012) [ | Ethiopia | 304 | Cross-sectional | All pregnant women who attended routine visits at the antenatal care clinic. | - Actiheart (heart rate and movement device). | - Objective. | Energy expenditure ≤1.5 METs. | Intermediate |
| - 24 h physical activity recall. | - Non-objective. | |||||||
| Jiang, et al. (2012) [ | China | 862 | Cohort | Pregnant women over 20 years old in a singleton pregnancy, and had no disease including gestational diabetes (GD), hypertension, heart disease, chronic renal disease, and other diseases restricting physical activity. | Pedometer. | Objective. | Less than 5000 steps per day. | Intermediate |
| Kamareswaran, et al. (2013) [ | UK | 10 | Cohort | Type 1 diabetes, current insulin pump therapy, and a viable singleton pregnancy. | Actiheart (heart rate and movement device). | Objective. | Activities expending ≤1 MET. | Intermediate |
| Li & Zhao (2007) [ | China | 405 | Cross-sectional | Pregnant women working in a sewing factory. | Self-reported questionnaire. | Non-Objective. | According to the job, women were assigned to the study group (persistent sedentary) or control group. | Poor |
| Loprinzi, et al. (2013) [ | USA | 206 | Cross-sectional | All women who answered the 2003–2006 National Health and Examination Survey. | ActiGraph accelerometer. | Objective. | Activity counts between 0 and 99 counts/min. | Intermediate |
| Lynch, et al. (2012) [ | USA | 1355 | Cohort | Women from the ambulatory obstetric practices at ≤20 weeks of gestation. | PPAQ. | Non-objective. | The amount of time spent watching TV or videos, or sitting or standing at home, work, or during transportation. | Intermediate |
| Oken, et al. (2006) [ | USA | 1581 | Cohort | Women attending initial prenatal visit, who delivered live infants. | Modified version of the leisure time activity section of the Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly (PASE). | Non-objective. | Hours per week spent watching TV or videos. | Intermediate |
| Padmapriya, et al. (2015) [ | Singapore | 1171 | Cohort | Pregnant women aged 18 years and above attending first trimester antenatal dating ultrasound scan clinics. | Interview questionnaire. | Non-objective. | Hours spent on sitting plus hours spent on watching TV per day. | Intermediate |
| Reid, et al. (2014) [ | Northern Ireland | 100 | Cohort | Healthy women, ≥16 years old, with singleton pregnancies, between 26 and 37 week gestation. | Body-media SenseWear Pro3 armband. | Objective. | Activities expending ≤1 MET. | Intermediate |
| Rhodes, et al. (2014) [ | Canada | 157 | Cohort | The cohorts were couples without children, first-time parents during the first year of their parenthood experience, and second time parents during the first year of this parenting experience between the ages of 25 and 40 years of age. | GT1M Activity Monitor (accelerometer and stepcounter). | Objective. | Activities expending 0–100 average acceleration counts/min. | Intermediate |
| Ruifrok, et al. (2014) [ | Netherlands | 111 | Cohort | Healthy pregnant women. Trial 1: nulliparous pregnant women without BMI restrictions, able to read, write and speak Dutch, and within their first 14 weeks of pregnancy; Trial 2: overweight and obese pregnant women at risk for gestational diabetes. | ActiTrainer accelerometer (Acti-Graph). | Objective. | Activities expending <100 counts/min. | Intermediate |
| Van Raaij, et al. (1990) [ | Netherlands | 18 | Cohort | Healthy women judged by medical histories, blood pressure, hemoglobin concentration, and urine analysis. | - Open-circuit indirect calorimetry. | - Objective. | Lying, sitting quietly or very light sitting activity, or light-to-moderate sitting activity. | Intermediate |
| - Physical activity diaries. | - Non-objective. | |||||||
| Watts, et al. (2013) [ | Australia | 81 | Cross-sectional | Pregnant women regardless of their pregnancy trimester. | The Australian Women’s Activity Survey (AWAS). | Non-objective. | Frequency and duration of sitting behavior. | Poor |
Characteristics of included studies
| Number of studies | Participants (N) | |
|---|---|---|
| Assessment tool | ||
| Accelerometer | 7 | 1356 |
| Accelerometer and HR sensor | 3 | 415 |
| Pedometer | 1 | 862 |
| Other objective | 2 | 118 |
| Pregnancy Physical Activity Questionnaire (PPAQ) | 4 | 4131 |
| Other self-reported | 9 | 26559 |
Time and proportion of time spent in sedentary behaviours
| Studies | N | Mean or median (SD or SE or IQR) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time spent in SB (objective) | |||
| Time spent in SB (h/day) | Ruifrok 2014 [ | 111 | 8.6 (SD 2.86) |
| Hawkins 2014 [ | 294 | 9.2 (SE 16.2)a | |
| Loprinzi 2013 [ | 206 | 7.7 (SE 0.2)a | |
| Hjorth 2012 [ | 304 | 18.3a (IQR16.65–19.6) | |
| Evenson 2011 [ | 359 | 7.07 (SE 0.165)a | |
| Di Fabio 2015 [ | 46 | 12.65 (SD 1.95)a | |
| Sitting quietly or very light sitting activities (h/day) | Van Raaij 1990 [ | 18 | 6.7 (SD1.6)a |
| Light to moderate sitting activities (h/day) | Van Raaij 1990 [ | 18 | 1.6 (SD1.1)a |
| Sit/lie time (h/day) | Di Fabio 2015 [ | 46 | 18.2 (IQR17.1–19) w18; 18.3 (IQR17.6–19.4) w35 |
| Time spent in SB (non-objective) | |||
| Television time (h/day) | Padmapriya 2015 [ | 1171 | 2.4 (SD1.5)a |
| Total sitting time (h/day) | Padmapriya 2015 [42) | 1171 | 8.6 (SD3.3)a |
| Proportion of time spent in SB (objective) | |||
| % of day spent in SB | Hjorth 2012 [ | 304 | 76.4% (IQR 69.37–81.6a) |
| % of wear time spent in SB | Ruifrok 2014 [ | 111 | 65% |
| Evenson 2011 [ | 359 | 57.1% (SE 0.77) | |
| Hawkins 2014 [ | 294 | 64.4% (SE 0.02)a | |
| % of time awake in SB | Di Fabio 2015 [ | 46 | 76% (SD11) w18–78% (SD13) w35 |
| % of day time in sit/lie | Di Fabio 2015 [ | 46 | 76% (IQR71–79) w18; 76% (IQR73–81) w35 |
a Numbers were calculated as means and converted to the same units
Prevalence of sedentarism among pregnant women
| Sedentary activity definition | Studies | Assessment method | N | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | Jiang 2012 [ | Objective | 862 | 18% |
| Hegaard 2011 [ | Non-objective | 4718 | 29% | |
| Watching TV or videos 5 or more (h/day) | Evenson 2011 [ | Non-objective | 359 | 15.3% |
| Watching TV 2 or more (h/day) | Oken 2006 [ | Non-objective | 1581 | 34% |
| Watching TV 3 or more (h/day) | Padmapriya 2015 [ | Non-objective | 1171 | 31.9% |
| Mostly sitting during day | Evenson 2011 [ | Non-objective | 359 | 24% |
Associations between sedentary behaviours and maternal health outcomes
| Author | Participants | Association (Yes/No) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnancy Outcomes | |||
| GWG | Ruifrok 2014 [ | 111 | No |
| Chasan-Taber 2014 [ | 1276 | No | |
| Jiang 2012 [ | 862 | Yesa ( | |
| Hypertensive disorders | Chasan-Taber 2015 [ | 1240 | No |
| Loprinzi 2013 [ | 206 | No | |
| Li 2007 [ | 405 | Yesb ( | |
| Depression | Watts 2013 [ | 81 | No |
| Metabolic Outcomes | |||
| Glucose levels | Loprinzi 2013 [ | 206 | Trend ( |
| Hayes 2014 [ | 183 | No | |
| Insulin sensitivity | Gradmark 2011 [ | 101 | No |
| GDM | Hayes 2014 [ | 183 | No |
| AGT | Gollenberg 2010 [ | 1006 | No |
| CRP | Loprinzi 2013 [ | 206 | Yesc ( |
| Hawkins 2014 [ | 294 | Yesc ( | |
| Blood lipids levels (Total Cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol and triglycerides) | Loprinzi 2013 [ | 206 | Yesd (LDL |
| Infant outcomes | |||
| Birth Weight | Ruifrok 2014 [ | 111 | No |
| Hegaard 2010 [ | 4558 | No | |
| Both 2010 [ | 11759 | Yese ( | |
| Macrosomia | Reid 2014 [ | 100 | Yesf ( |
| New-born abdominal circumference | Hayes 2014 [ | 183 | Yesg ( |
| Gestational length | Ruifrok 2014 [ | 111 | No |
| Both 2010 [ | 11759 | No | |
| Risk of preterm delivery | Both 2010 [ | 11759 | No |
a GWG was higher in the sedentary group compared with the active group, b the sedentary group developed more hypertension, c Increased time in sedentary behaviours is associated with higher levels of CRP, d increased time in sedentary behaviour is associated with higher LDL cholesterol, e Increased time in sedentary behaviour is associated with lower birth weight, f women delivering macrosomic infants had higher levels of SB, g the association between SB and new-born abdominal circumference was inverse at baseline, and positive at 36 weeks